
 
		Clark Street subway station  
 will reopen in April 
 The Clark Street station in Brooklyn Heights.  Photo by Ben Verde 
 COURIER LIFE, MARCH 4-10, 2022 29  
 The Clark Street subway  
 stop will reopen for full service  
 in April — which should  
 help boost its mom and pop  
 businesses, who have been  
 suffering from the lack of foot  
 traffi c — the MTA recently  
 told the Brooklyn Heights Association. 
   Nurturing  local  
 retail has been a focus of the  
 venerable neighborhood organization, 
  which just surveyed  
 pedestrians  on  Montague  
 Street and is mulling whether  
 closing the thoroughfare to  
 cars could help revitalize it. 
 “Our  goal  is  to  create  a  
 pedestrian-friendly  zone  
 to encourage people to linger  
 and shop so our existing  
 businesses  will  fl ourish  and  
 new businesses will fi ll  the  
 empty spots,” said BHA President  
 Erika Belsey Worth at  
 the group’s annual meeting  
 Thursday, February 24. 
 Speaking  of  traffi c,  the  
 nonprofi t continues to push  
 government to address the  
 failing BQE cantilever before  
 disaster strikes. “The 20 years  
 DOT says we’ve gained will be  
 over in a blink of the eye,” said  
 Belsey  Worth.  “Our  current  
 goals  include  keeping  city  
 and state eyes on the BQE.” 
 The group applauds recent  
 efforts to reduce traffi c on the  
 strained  roadway.  “Reducing  
 lanes from three to two was a  
 very bold use of paint,” Belsey  
 Worth said, referring to one  
 of the new measures. On the  
 plus  side,  traffi c  reduction  
 has not increased traffi c  on  
 surrounding  surface  streets,  
 as  had  been  feared,  and  the  
 crash  rate  has  plummeted,  
 she said. 
 Whatever  solution  is  
 found, the BHA’s priorities include  
 eliminating vibrations,  
 noise and pollution and maintaining  
 the Brooklyn Heights  
 Promenade  and  existing  entrances  
 to  Brooklyn  Bridge  
 Park, she said. Founded in  
 1910, the infl uential  group’s  
 many  accomplishments  include  
 preserving  the  neighborhood, 
   stopping  highways  
 and creating parks. 
 Considering  Covid  challenges, 
  the group held a remarkable  
 number of events in  
 2021, including a fundraising  
 party on the Promenade that  
 preservationist  Otis  Pearsall  
 and other Brooklyn luminaries  
 attended.  BHA  plans  
 to  make  its  spring  neighborhood  
 cleanup an annual event  
 and to expand its new and  
 popular walking tours. 
 After skipping its biennial  
 show  house  fundraiser  in  
 2021 “for obvious reasons,” as  
 Belsey Worth put it, BHA will  
 hold its third one later this  
 year; more details are coming  
 soon.  Despite  postponing  the  
 show house, the group netted  
 $56,000 and has assets of more  
 than $722,000 for the past fi scal  
 year, said BHA Executive  
 Director Lara Birnback. 
 The group’s annual service  
 awards went to the founders  
 of  the  Brooklyn  Heights  
 Community Fridge and to  
 Amerika Williamson for organizing  
 the annual holiday  
 tree lighting on the Brooklyn  
 Heights Promenade. 
 The focus of this year’s  
 meeting  was  a  conversation  
 with  two  experts  about  climate  
 change  and  what  to  do  
 about it. 
 “The battle to contain  
 greenhouse  gases  was  lost  
 in  the  ’90s,”  and  climate  
 change  is  already  here,  said  
 author,  consultant  and  climate  
 change  expert  Eugene  
 Linden. Emissions are 63 percent  
 higher  than  they  were  
 some 30-plus years ago when  
 the issue became public. In  
 large part, that’s because the  
 U.S. encouraged developing  
 countries China and India to  
 embrace  coal.  “The  result  is  
 China’s emissions dwarf anyone  
 else’s. India is third in  
 emissions,” he said. “Everyone  
 signed on to reduce emissions  
 but  everyone’s  efforts  
 were  muted  by  emissions  
 from China.” 
 While  the  public  thinks  
 climate change is far off, “it’s  
 become quite  clear  since  the  
 ’90s that climate change is  
 here.  Each  decade  has  been  
 warmer  than  the  last  and  
 they’re  all  setting  records,”  
 he  continued.  Weather-related  
 disasters in the last decade  
 cost $3 trillion. 
 “The  perverse  incentives  
 prevail  everywhere;  there  
 is  enormous  momentum  to  
 business  as  usual,”  he  said.  
 Although  “the  hour  is  very  
 late,”  every  nation  on  earth  
 has  to  lower  emissions,  and  
 “every nation can.” 
 Linden proposes a universal  
 tariff  that  would  apply  
 globally  to  lower  emissions  
 at  least  3  percent  a  year.  In  
 the U.S., businesses are starting  
 to realize it’s in their interest  
 to  reduce  emissions  
 and  “they  are  going  to  have  
 to  take  the  lead”  because  
 they  “have  the  megaphone  
 and  control  our  politics,”  he  
 said. 
 Nonetheless,  said  fellow  
 speaker  and  environmental  
 journalist  Leslie  Kaufman,  
 urgent action is needed from  
 the government because “until  
 the government puts on a  
 carbon tax or tariff, we move  
 too slowly or ineffectively.” 
 At  home,  individuals  can  
 help  make  a  difference  by  
 boycotting  products  from  
 bad  actors,  taking  public  
 transportation  and  not  fl ying, 
   and  New  York  City  can  
 likely be powered entirely by  
 renewable energy sources,  
 they said. 
 If  you  want  to  watch  the  
 meeting  yourself,  a  video  recording  
 is available.